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Study helps clarify role of vitamin D in cancer therapy
A colon cancer cell isn't a lost
cause. Vitamin D can tame the rogue cell by adjusting everything from
its gene expression to its cytoskeleton. In the Nov. 17 issue of the
Journal of Cell Biology,
Ordóñez-Morán et al. show that one pathway governs the vitamin's
diverse effects. The results help clarify the actions of a molecule
that is undergoing clinical trials as a cancer therapy.
Vitamin
D stymies colon cancer cells in two ways. It switches on genes such as
the one that encodes E-cadherin, a component of the adherens junctions
that anchor cells in epithelial layers. The vitamin also induces
effects on the cytoskeleton that are required for gene regulation and
short-circuiting the Wnt/b-catenin pathway, which is overactive in most
colon tumors. The net result is to curb division and prod colon cancer
cells to differentiate into epithelial cells that settle down instead
of spreading.
To delve into the mechanism, the team dosed
colon cancer cells with calcitriol, the metabolically active version of
vitamin D. Calcitriol triggered a surge of calcium into the cells and
the subsequent switching on of RhoA–RhoGTPases, which have been
implicated in the cytoskeletal changes induced by vitamin D. The
activated RhoA in turn switched on one of its targets, the
rho-associated coiled kinase (ROCK), which then roused two other
kinases. Each step in this nongenomic pathway was necessary to spur the
genomic responses, the researchers showed. The team also nailed down
the contribution of the vitamin D receptor (VDR). The receptor was
crucial at the beginning of the pathway, where it permitted the calcium
influx, and at the end, where it activated and repressed genes.
The
study is the first to show that vitamin D's genomic and nongenomic
effects integrate to regulate cell physiology. One question the
researchers now want to pursue is whether VDR from different
locations—the nucleus, the cytosol, and possibly the cell membrane—has
different functions in the pathway.
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Ordóñez-Morán, P., et al. 2008.
J. Cell Biol. doi:10.1083/jcb.200803020.